posted on 2019-08-06, 12:53authored byJordan Bestwick, David M. Unwin, Mark A. Purnell
Reptiles are key components of modern ecosystems, yet for many species detailed characterisations
of their diets are lacking. Data currently used in dietary reconstructions are limited either to the last
few meals or to proxy records of average diet over temporal scales of months to years, providing only
coarse indications of trophic level(s). Proxies that record information over weeks to months would
allow more accurate reconstructions of reptile diets and better predictions of how ecosystems might
respond to global change drivers. Here, we apply dental microwear textural analysis (DMTA) to dietary
guilds encompassing both archosaurian and lepidosaurian reptiles, demonstrating its value as a tool
for characterising diets over temporal scales of weeks to months. DMTA, involving analysis of the
three-dimensional, sub-micrometre scale textures created on tooth surfaces by interactions with food,
reveals that the teeth of reptiles with diets dominated by invertebrates, particularly invertebrates
with hard exoskeletons (e.g. beetles and snails), exhibit rougher microwear textures than reptiles with
vertebrate-dominated diets. Teeth of fish-feeding reptiles exhibit the smoothest textures of all guilds.
These results demonstrate the efficacy of DMTA as a dietary proxy in taxa from across the phylogenetic
range of extant reptiles. This method is applicable to extant taxa (living or museum specimens) and
extinct reptiles, providing new insights into past, present and future ecosystems.
Funding
This work was funded by a NERC studentship awarded through the Central England NERC Training Alliance
(CENTA; grant reference NE/L002493/1) and by the University of Leicester (to J.B.). We thank P. Campbell
(NHMUK), M. Carnall (OUMNH) T. Davidson (LDUCZ), C. Sheehy (UF), A. Resetar (FMNH) and A. Wynn
(USNM) for access to specimens.
The datasets generated from the current study are available from the corresponding author upon request. Supplementary information accompanies this paper at https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-48154-9